|
Ready to Paint: Venice in Acrylics
Paperback / softback
Main Details
Title |
Ready to Paint: Venice in Acrylics
|
Authors and Contributors |
By (author) Wendy Jelbert
|
Series | Ready to Paint |
Physical Properties |
Format:Paperback / softback | Pages:72 | Dimensions(mm): Height 292,Width 216 |
|
Category/Genre | Painting and paintings Painting and art manuals |
ISBN/Barcode |
9781844484133
|
Classifications | Dewey:751.426 |
---|
Audience | |
Illustrations |
200 Illustrations, color
|
|
Publishing Details |
Publisher |
Search Press Ltd
|
Imprint |
Search Press Ltd
|
Publication Date |
20 February 2009 |
Publication Country |
United Kingdom
|
Description
Venice is probably the most painted city in the world with its exquisite facades and endless subjects for artists. Wendy Jelbert makes acrylics easy to use in this step-by-step guide and includes many exciting techniques - all of which are essential for capturing the essence and beauty of this magnificent city. She includes practical tips, detailed instruction and shows how versatile acrylics can be. Five demonstrations offer an in-depth course for beginners and include the Rialto Bridge, the Grand Canal, gondolas, reflections, stunning architecture and more. No drawing skills are required because full size pull out tracings containing the demonstration outlines are included. The focus is purely on acquiring the painting skills needed to build up confidence and to create truly inspiring paintings.
Author Biography
Wendy Jelbert is a teacher and professional artist who works in pastels, oils, acrylics, inks and watercolours. She enjoys experimenting with different ways of using mixed media and texture and her sometimes unconventional methods often produce surprising and original results.Wendy lives in Andover, Hampshire.
ReviewsThe Ready to Paint series are a really useful addition for artist wishing to practice painting techniques without worrying about the drawing first. Each book carries several drawings ready for tracing and once this step is done the artist can follow Wendys' easy to understand instructions to complete a beautiful artwork. She gives an overview of all the materials needed for each project including the colours she uses. Many people are confused by acrylics seeing them as between watercolour and oils but they are a very useful addition in their own right for any artist being so versatile. Wendy shows us in this book how to use them in loose light washes and how to overlay them letting colour from beneath show through. In this way she creates some sensitive and atmospheric scenes. The five inspirational projects included in the book use a variety of different techniques that once practised will be useful for future artworks. They are very easy to follow as Wendy clearly explains and illustrates each step. Each one focusses on a particular element of Venice such as the canals and reflections and the gondolas. These illustrations truly embody the spirit of Venice as we think of it, and the student will create a painting to be proud of. Having completed the book the student will have a good grounding in how to use acrylics in a soft and loose way. An inspiring book for any artist, containing useful information for painting in acrylics in a subtle way with some excellent demonstration outlines.-JeannieZelos.com OK, now I'm beginning to get scared. This series has turned out much better than I'd expected and has gone down very well with painters in general. Much of its appeal lies in the excellent execution - done badly it would have been barely more than a glorified painting-by-numbers game, but the idea of being freed from the tyranny of the initial drawing has worked and that's good. But tracings of a real place? Isn't that cheating? Well, maybe, but Venice is the Mecca for the artist and not everyone can get there, so the idea of an armchair guide does make sense. How you explain the resulting artwork on your wall is up to you; Wendy's keeping schtum on that one. The five demonstrations will give you a good selection of the classic Venice scenes, including the Rialto bridge, the Grand Canal and the inevitable gondola. If you want to paint Venice and your travelling is all done firmly from your armchair, look no further, the world is coming to you.-Artbookreview.net Ready To Paint are a series of unique books designed for beginning artists who want to paint, but whose lack of drawing ability is holding them back. Each book concentrates on a different popular subject for paintings, and contains six reusable tracings plus full instructions on how to paint the pictures. This title shows you how to paint views of Venice using acrylics. What news on the Rialto? Along with the famous view at night, you can also paint pictures of reflections in the water, gondolas and a view of the Grand Canal. It is easy to see the appeal of these lovely scenes and their vibrant, sketchy quality adds to their vigor and interest. You don't need many supplies to take up acrylic painting and the basic range of colors is quite small- encouraging for a beginner not wishing to spend too much. This series has covered many subjects for watercolour painting, and now it is the turn of acrylics, the most versatile and modern of paints. Unlike Charles Evans' Landscapes in Acrylics (also reviewed on this site), these projects do not each outline a different aspect of working with the medium but just show how to paint the picture. Both methods are useful, and if I were a beginner I think I would want to have a go at each to see which I learned the most from. Each of the five projects (you are on your own for the sixth as always) is explained in at least twenty stages, starting very simply and adding a bit more each step with a brief explanation of what is going on. This is a grand way of mastering painting a picture, and it is nice to see a more unusual topic for one of these basic primers.-Myshelf.com Venice in Acrylics is a lively tribute to that fascinating city by the popular artist and author, Wendy Jelbert, who does justice to its beauty with her bold and lively paintings. Her five main subjects include canal reflections, the Rialto Bridge, the Grand Canal, the spirit of Venice and gondolas with lanterns; and she shows how she develops each of her subjects in step-by-step demonstrations. At the beginning of the book there are tracings of the six paintings so that readers may get down to painting without spending much time on the preliminary drawing.-Leisure Painter
|